Suggested Predictions
Ziibos (14)
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Nearly 15,000 people died in the devastating earthquake that hit China's Sichuan province on May 12, the official Xinhua news agency has reported. More than 25,000 are still trapped in the rubble two days after the 7.9 quake struck, causing landslides and razing homes, schools and whole villages.
Doing a Google News search for "China Earthquake Economy", you will see hot and discrete comments on how the recent quake impacts the economy: BusinessWeek: China Quake Won't Shake Economy (http://www.businessweek.c...) Moody's Economy: Earthquake seen to hurt Chinese economy (http://www.tradingmarkets...) Forbes: China earthquake could affect Japan's economy (http://www.forbes.com/afx...)
Comments (7)
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The area is only 5% of China, but is one of the largest production agricultural regions. It also has the most mineral resources, something that China has been starved of in it's recent economic boom. +80% of the work force is utilised. On the other hand, there is a large degree of poverty in the region and a very large, transitory population.
So we have a lot of damaged infrastructure and a LOT of people without housing at the moment, with little in the way of individual financial capital for rebuilding.
Firstly they need to ensure that a significant population of people are fed and watered - thankfully the large agriculture production of the region is one of the things going for them - though there will be food shortages until basic infrastructure is rebuilt. Thankfully they will also have a large workforce to mobilise - as long as they can get materials and transport.
Then they need to rebuild housing and/or migrate people out of the area - before winter. The migration of workers to unaffected areas may become a problem in the third step below.
Then they need to rebuild/repair damaged economic infrastructure.
Somewhere about step 2 and step 3, especially if winter hits, medium-term medical problems are going to arise - poor sanitation, exposure, stress, nutritional problems - in short, expect a lot of moderate to severe disease among the susceptible. All they need now is a resurgence of SARS or bird flu.
In short, one of the most productive areas of China has just become a drain on transport, materials, medication and funding. Food may or may not be a problem, based on how quickly agricultural and basic transport can be reestablished. Some people will move out of the area, which will relieve pressure on the rebuilding effort, but slow down eventual economic recovery.
I think we'll see over the next year or so, an amazing amount of cooperation in the affected communities - but it won't be easy for them, and China's economy is going to slow down as a result - but not drop.
http://money.cnn.com/2008/05/20/news/...
This probably has a lot to do with the lack of discipline among Myanmar's local government. People are afraid their donation won't go to the intended victims. I suppose the Chinese government are doing better in that sense. I hope both countries will recover from this soon.
And yes, any such huge natural disaster WILL affect the local economy for years to come. The best a government can do is to rebuild the basic infrastructure, and push out policies to attract new investments.
However the China Petro had cut the gas field production and thus will increase the inflation in food and energy supplies. The quake will further raise the inflation in the entire E. Asia region.